The summit of the album is reached on 'Once I Had a Sweetheart', a cover of an American folk song, its blissful soft-focus melody gently stretching out over the course of four gorgeous sun-dappled minutes.

Venturing into more out-there territory 'Couldn’t Do' dispenses with its repeated refrain of the title early on before giving way to a pulsating, synth-led sounscape of mandolins and sitars that almost nudges into double figures.

In complete contrast 'I Fell in Love', a distant cousin of the Mary Chain’s 'Taste of Cindy' clocks in around the two minute mark demonstrating Porpora’s ability at creating poppier material.

Elsewhere an inspired cover of 'Red Moon' by fellow New Yorkers’ The Walkmen re-tools the steady waltz of the original into something approaching a desolate country lament.

A rendition of Hoagy Carmichael’s 'The Nearness of You' meanwhile proves to be a slight misfire, the swirling white noise and echoing arrangement of the much-covered standard obscuring the song’s melodic core.

Concluding with the hazy swoon of 'Let Me Follow You Down', the track brings the set to a close on a highpoint, the birdsong samples the sound of the dawn chorus breaking after the small-hours intimacy of the preceding nine songs.

Next to useless on an early morning commute prior to the drudgery of the daily grind, played at the other end of the lunar phase Mad Love makes for quintessential, beatific late night listening.